Senator Smathers, Mr. Chairman, Governor Bryant, Senator
Holland, members of the Florida delegation, Secretary Ribicoff, Senator
Jennings Randolph, ladies and gentlemen:
I had never heard until tonight
Senator Holland's nominating speech for Senator Smathers, but it is one
of the most moving speeches that I have ever heard. The question is, George,
were you really serious out there in Los Angeles?
I actually came down here tonight
to pay a debt of obligation to an old friend and faithful adviser. He and
I came to the 80th Congress together, and have been associated for many
years, and I regard him as one of my most valuable counselors in moments
of great personal and public difficulty.
In 1952, when I was thinking
about running for the United States Senate, I went to the then Senator
Smathers, and said, "George, what do you think?" He said, "Don't do it.
Can't win. Bad year."
In 1956 I was at the Democratic
Convention, and I said - I didn't know whether I would run for Vice President
or not, so I said, "George, what do you think? This is it. They need a
young man." "It's your chance." So I ran - and lost.
And in 1960 I was wondering
whether I ought to run in the West Virginia primary. "Don't do it. That
State you can't possibly carry."
And actually, the only time
I really got nervous about the whole matter at Los Angeles, was just before
the balloting, and George came up and he said, "I think it looks pretty
good for you."
It will encourage you to know
that every Tuesday morning we have breakfast together and he advises with
me - Cuba, anything else, Laos, Berlin - anything - George comes right
out there and gives his views and I listen very carefully.
It is a great honor to be here.
And I think that you are fortunate, I had heard in Washington that Senator
Smathers had a tough fight, I wanted to come down here - I have been asking
all day who he's running against - nobody knows his name - $300,000 has
been raised for this fight, but we're all glad to pitch in, in a hard battle.
George, it's a bad year!
All of you, however, have a
downpayment on his candidacy, and I know that you are going to support
him wholeheartedly. I think the best test of any man is the opinion of
those who serve with him. He is a member of what has been called the most
exclusive club in the world - it is the only club that it is safe to be
a member of in Washington today. And in that club he is one of the leaders
of the majority party. He was Chairman of the Senate Campaign Committee.
When I was running for the Presidency, he was the chairman of our campaign
in the South. When I stood up to be married, he was my usher. And therefore
I am delighted to come here to join with a friend - which is the most important
thing - and also a distinguished Member of the United States Senate.
I think George Smathers - in
fact I know this - in the 1950's when Latin America was a matter of, I
think, comparative indifference, when our eyes were concentrated on problems
all over the world, to the best of my recollection - and I think Senator
Holland pointed this out very wisely - Senator Smathers was the only Member
of the United States Senate who time and time again indicated to the Members
of the Senate, and to the people of the United States, that this is our
backyard.
From 1945 to 1960 the United
States gave as much aid to Yugoslavia as it did to all of Latin America,
and it is a source of satisfaction to me, with all of the problems that
we now face in Latin America, and all of the challenges, that this country
has a program in the Alliance for Progress which I believe can successfully
counter the Communist onslaught in this hemisphere.
And your Senator, Senator Smathers
- reaching as this State does into the South - I believe was the first
Member of the Senate, really, in the fifties who pointed out how ignored
we had been and how uncertain we had been in our policy toward this area.
I am confident that Senator Smathers will be reelected.
This is a great State. I am
not sure that the people of Florida realize yet what is happening to this
State and what will happen in the next 10 years. The space age which we
all take such satisfaction in, in the person of Colonel Glenn, is going
to make the most profound difference to this State.
In the next year we will have
five times as many people working in the Canaveral area as we do today.
We will spend four times - in the space program - as much as we do today.
But that is only the beginning. As Governor Bryant said, with that emphasis
on space will come the scientists and engineers, will come the improvement
in your universities and colleges, will come the emphasis on technical
accomplishments, which can make Florida one of the most vigorous and vital
areas of the United States.
California - we have seen that
in that State, with the great emphasis which its universities and colleges
have made upon technical accomplishment. As you know, Berkeley, the University
of California, has nearly three times as many Nobel prize winners in its
campus alone as the whole Soviet Union, and what has happened there with
their emphasis on technology, is going to happen in this State - if the
people of Florida recognize the opportunity that is before them.
And I believe that your distinguished
Governor recognizes that, and Senator Holland, a Member of the Space Committee,
and Senator Smathers and the members of your congressional delegation,
and the people of this State, who will put emphasis on improving your colleges
and universities and schools, can make Florida one of the most vital, vigorous
sections not only of this country but of the world.
I believe the New Frontier can
be captured here in Florida as almost no other State of the Union, and
I am confident that the people of this State will recognize that space
is not merely a brave individual, Colonel Glenn, but means all of the changes
of technology and science and engineering, which can move this State up
to being a vigorous and vital place.
In one of the most amazing prophecies
in history a hundred years ago, Jules Verne prophesied that there would
be a competition between Florida and Texas as to which State would be the
source of vitality in the space age. He thought that Florida might fail
because there was no city large enough, and he wondered whether Florida
was stable enough, linked to the United States, to stand the blast which
would come when we finally put a man in space. One hundred years ago!
Well, I prophesy in the next
10 years that this State is going to have the greatest period of development
of any State in the United States - and you, the people of Florida, must
be part of it.
And I think your Governor, and
Senator Smathers, and Senator Holland, and the members of your delegation,
recognize it. Those who say why should we go to the moon, it's not the
moon that we are interested in; it's the ability of the United States as
the leader of the free world to be second to none in a vital sea and ocean
- which I believe space to be. And what it means here and around the world
I believe can be the most important part of our rise in the 1960's.
In looking back over the last
year, I take some satisfaction in some events, and I take disappointment
in others. We have, I believe, got a policy towards Latin America - though
we must implement it. We have attempted to rebuild the economy of the United
States, and it is a fact that employment and profits and the whole source
of the economy has moved ahead. And we are attempting in a trade policy
to revitalize our economy and tie us closer together in Europe.
But I want to emphasize the
jobs that are still undone. Woodrow Wilson in 1913 said "What good is the
success of a party unless it serves a great national purpose?" And I want
to emphasize how essential are our great national purposes in the next
decade.
The United States - and this
becomes more and more obvious every day - is the source of strength of
the entire free world. We are criticized and denounced regularly, day by
day, in every section of the free world. But the fact of the matter is
that in this hemisphere, in Western Europe and the defense of Western Europe,
in Berlin, in Africa, in Asia, in the far reaches of South Korea, all the
way stretching in a great half-circle from Berlin, the United States is
the sentinel at the gate.
I said a year ago that I do
not think that any of us should regret this role - and I do not. It is
burdensome. I am sure that you get fatigued from it. I am sure you regard
it as a heavy burden on you. But the fact of the matter is that if we fail
the whole cause of freedom fails. And I believe as a citizen of the United
States that we should be prepared to carry that burden, regardless of whether
others are willing to do so or not.
And I know that you get tired
of assisting countries far away. The fact of the matter is, I am sure there's
no one who gets more tired of it than your Senior Senator, Senator Holland.
But it is a fact last summer, when this program was under attack, Senator
Holland and a few other Senators - as a matter of fact, in both parties
- made it possible for us to carry on a program which makes the United
States contribute to the defense of NATO - Greece, Turkey, Iran, Pakistan,
India, Thailand, Laos, Vietnam, the Republic of China, the Philippines,
South Korea, as well as Latin America and Africa. That is a role which
I believe, when the history of this age is written and all of us who bear
positions of responsibility have passed from the scene, I believe that
that is a record - however tired and burdensome it may now seem - that
is the record for which we will be remembered.
So I come to this city and this
State which has a most promising future, as a part of a country which has
a most promising future as a part of the free world which I believe has
a most promising future. The fact of the matter is that in the last 12
months we have seen more clearly than ever before the contrast between
our system and that of those who make themselves our adversaries.
The wall in Berlin, to lock
people in, I believe is the obvious manifestation, which can be demonstrated
all over the world, of the superiority of our system. And the question
now is: Are we willing to stand the cost? Are we willing to carry the burdens
through the next 10 or 15 or 20 years? I believe we are.
And I come to this southern
part of the United States to speak on behalf of your Junior Senator, Senator
Smathers, who I am confident will come back. And Dante Fascell, the Congressman
from this city. Dante once said that the hottest places in hell are reserved
for those who in a period of moral crisis maintain their neutrality. He
does not, and that is why I am confident that he will be re-elected, too,
to the United States Congress.
The history of the United States
was not written at Jamestown, or in Massachusetts. It began here in your
State - St. Augustine, 400 years old. And I believe that here in the oldest
part of the United States we have a potential of being the most vital and
vigorous.
So I join you tonight in a salute
to your junior Senator - a salute to your State - and also a salute to
our country.
Thank you.